

Author: Tchabi Atti
Publisher: Springer Publishing Company
ISSN: 0940-6360
Source: Mycorrhiza, Vol.18, Iss.4, 2008-04, pp. : 181-195
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Abstract
The rapid decline of soil fertility of cultivated lands in the sub-Saharan savannas of West Africa is considered to be the main cause of the increasingly severe constraints of food production. The soils in this tropical area are highly fragile, and crop yields are limited by characteristically low levels of available phosphorus. Under such preconditions, the multiple benefits of the arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis are likely to play a pivotal role for maintaining natural soil fertility by enhancing plant nutrient use efficiency, plant health, and stabilization of a favorable soil structure. Thus, it is important to explore the impact of the commonly applied farming practices on the native AM fungal community. In the present study, we determined the AM fungal species composition in three ecological zones differing by an increasingly prolonged dry season from South to North, from the Southern Guinea Savanna (SG), to the Northern Guinea Savanna (NG), to the Sudan Savanna (SU). In each zone, four “natural” and four “cultivated” sites were selected. “Natural” sites were three natural forest savannas (at least 25-30 years old) and a long-term fallow (6-7 years old). “Cultivated” sites comprised a field with yam (
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